| McCormack
DNA-125
Amplifier |
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Jim
Merod |
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1
August 2000 |
Specifications
Output
Power: 125 watts
per channel into 8
ohms and 200 watts
per channel into 4
ohms, both
channels driven
from 20Hz to 20
kHz at less than
1% THD.
Input Impedance:
100 kOhms
Input Sensitivity:
1.0 Vrms
Voltage Gain: 30
dB
Frequency
Response: -3 dB @
.5 Hz, 200 kHz
Signal to Noise
Ratio: 98 dB
Harmonic
Distortion (1 kHz,
8-ohm load): .05%
Signal Polarity:
("Absolute
Phase"):
Non-inverting
Power Requirements
(117 V/60 HZ):
0.65 Amps/80 watts
@ idle; 3.2
Amps/400 watts @
clipping (8 ohms)
Dimensions:
19" W × 4
9/16" H ×
15" D
Shipping Weights:
37 lbs.
Price: $1695.
Manufacturer:
McCormack Audio
Corporation of
Virginia
Inc., 2733
Merrilee Drive
Fairfax, VA 22031
Phone:
703-573-9665
Fax: 703-573-9667
Web: www.McCormackAudio.com
"There
is no amplifier
that I am aware of
that delivers such
a combination of
virtues at such a
modest price. The
McCormack line is,
and has long been,
a standard of
genuine audio
value in a
high-priced, often
inflated
market."
When
the brand new
McCormack DNA-125
arrived at Chez
BluePort, its deep
burnished aluminum
housing gleamed in
the afternoon
California calm
with evil
intention. I have
been a fan of
McCormack gear a
long time. Several
pieces are central
to my daily work
as a sound
engineer. For four
or five years, the
McCormack
Headphone Drive
has made
professional life
bearable on the
road as I plunge,
soul first, ears
& fingers at
the ready,
recording jazz and
blues in every
imaginable hot
spot and
godforsaken
musical backwater.
Last week, it was
Bill Magee's Blues
Band at Blind
Melons in Pacific
Beach--the week
before, Tierney
Sutton at
Monteleone's in
Los Angeles, and
the next night,
Carl Saunders
Sextet at Steamers
Jazz Club in
Fullerton.
Two
nights later I
witnessed Chris
Colangelo's
Quartet reaching
hard and true for
their first live
album. Somebody
has to do it, and
Steve McCormack's
"no-nonsense"
equipment improves
my chances of
capturing and
preserving
difficult-to-record
live material. The
essence of my
on-location
recording work is
defined by
frequently wild
acoustic dynamics.
During a band's
on-stage activity,
I have to cope
with musicians who
move off mike,
stage monitors
that overload,
multiple
microphones,
raucous crowds of
enthusiastic
revelers,
sometimes
infelicitous on
stage acoustic
bleed, and
numerous
improbable (but
sure to appear)
surprises. Thus,
the power and
accuracy of the
McCormack
Headphone
Drive--which I
have written about
at length
elsewhere--is one
of my most useful
tools. If I cannot
hear what is
happening during a
performance, and
hear it with
truthfulness and
delicacy, then my
chances of
catching the sound
I want diminish
greatly.
Enter
this
on-location-recording
engineer into one
of his mastering
enclaves. Turn on
the new DNA-125
amplifier newly
minted by
McCormack of
Virginia. Let it
warm up. Present
it with raw
unmastered music
from the previous
night. And sit
back to hear what
you've got.
The
aftermath of live
recording work is
no less crucial to
final success than
the unfolding
hours of stuffing
24-bit information
onto tape in a
club or concert
hall. Mastering
begins with
scrupulous
awareness of what
you have to work
with. Therefore,
exceptional
monitors and
exceptional
amplifiers are
essential.
For
five years or
more, I have used
a revised
McCormack 0.5 amp
in such work. Over
the last two or
three years, I
have been in the
presence of
various original
McCormack
amplifiers (0.5s,
1.0s, and 2s) that
have been given
Steve McCormack's
remarkable
upgrades. On
dozens of
occasions, the
mastering of
BluePort
recordings has
taken place with
those highly
uncolored, truly
dynamic amplifiers
in the signal
path. McCormack
amplifiers have a
long track record
of unvarnished
musical
truthfulness.
Their character,
as a consistent
sonic virtue, is a
combination of raw
power, musical
ease, wide
spectral
extension, and an
utterly convincing
sense of image
placement,
soundstage depth,
and ambient
retrieval.
There
is no amplifier
that I am aware of
that delivers such
a combination of
virtues at such a
modest price. The
McCormack line is,
and has long been,
a standard of
genuine audio
value in a
high-priced, often
inflated market.
Enter,
with hope written
in code across its
chassis, the new
McCormack of
Virginia DNA-125.
This amp bears the
understated good
looks that have
always
characterized
McCormack gear.
DNA- 125 and
DNA-225 amps stand
in the direct line
of their amplifier
forebearers both
sonically and
aesthetically. The
good news is that,
visually, the new
amps are
appealing--an
enhancement of
exterior good
looks. After weeks
of careful
listening, the
rest of the good
news is no less
immediate and
direct. These new
amplifiers will
rock your boat,
your house, and
your sturdy
music-hungry soul.
When
the DNA 125
appeared it was in
slight need of
some bias work,
which
designer-creator
(all round musical
and electronic
genius) Steve
McCormack took
care of right
away. This amp is
only recently
getting to dealer
showrooms and my
unit was, I
believe, among the
first off the
production block.
Although,
in its initial
(misadjusted)
condition, the amp
was a trifle dark
in its sonic
presentation, I
liked what I
heard. The amp
simply took its
place between my
Cabasse Baltic-Stromboli
speakers and began
to show off.
That
may seem like a
strange way to
characterize a
piece of audio
gear. After all,
we are dealing
here with mute
circuits that only
spring to life
when music is
funneled through
them. In moments
of narcissism, I'd
like to think that
such brute
instruments of
musical mischief
only become
"real"
when the sort of
work that I do
wakes them into
action.
There
may be a thin
veneer of truth to
such fantasy, but
anyone familiar
with audio
electronics knows
that every brand,
each unit, any
refinement (or
tweak) alters the
musical equation.
My recording work
stands ready to be
made glorious or
go down to defeat
at the whim of an
amplifier's mood.
I never
underestimate the
ability of
amplifiers to tell
the truth,
"improve the
truth," or
mangle the truth
of musical
signals.
In
pursuit of
knowledge about my
recordings, I
often play them
(carefully
selected pieces)
on big audio
reproduction rigs
set up to startle
the multitudes at
trade shows,
conventions, and
the like. The
experiment in
hearing your own
recordings riffed
back at you from a
dozen or more
expensive stereo
or surround sound
systems can keep
you humble, or
alert you to
useful things in
your own work and
in the sonic
breeding of the
systems you are
listening to.
Amplifiers
come in as many
sonic flavors and
shades of possible
musical
"truth"
as there are
amplifiers on the
market. I am
always amused at
the notion of
absolute
"accuracy"
in
amplification--of
explicit sonic
transparency. I
have not yet heard
that mythical
moment made
incarnate.
"Perhaps,
of all the words
I can choose to
characterize
this McCormack
amplifier, the
one that most
exactly fits it
is the word
"musical."
That can be a
somewhat
ambiguous term,
so let me open
it up a bit in
relation to this
little
amplification
giant."
I
have no doubt at
all that some
amplifiers own a
curious, lovely
way with music
that can tickle
your heart
strings. Others
have a startling
way with strongly
graphic sonic
presentation.
Others yet blend
the two attitudes
into a
non-analytical yet
not overly
romantic audio
world. Amplifiers
that have
impressed me the
most over a long
time have been
those than carry
enough sonic
confidence to dig
down deep into the
music--into its
most
finely-wrought
details--to
deliver an
explicit, vivid
sense of musical
nuance, and the
nuances that are
inscribed by the
recording chain
itself.
I
doubt that many
people will listen
for such cues but,
on amplifiers
capable of these
discriminations,
if you are
familiar with
microphones and
with microphone
placement (and
other technical
aspects of
recording and
mastering), you
can hear the
signature of a
specific
microphone, even
on a recording
that you've never
previously heard.
If an amplifier
has enough
signal-resolving
power, the
smallest degrees
of sonic
information are
unobtrusively
revealed as part
of the music.
Usually
one hears
significant
micro-information
only from very
large amplifiers.
I have recently
heard large Audio
Research and BAT
amplifiers get the
music right and,
also, deliver such
"sidebars"
of sonic
information.
Enter
the McCormack DNA
125. While this is
not the biggest
amp in the line,
rated at 125
watts/channel into
8 ohms (200 watts
into 4 ohms), it
is plenty hefty.
When I installed
it, somewhat
sadistically, in
front of the
unforgiving Apogee
"Stage"
speakers, which
drop down to a
2-ohm load, the
DNA 125 accounted
itself very nicely
though not as
spectacularly as
its bigger brother
the DNA-225, but
quite well,
nonetheless.
The
test of the
DNA-125 is not a
brutal, somewhat
iconoclastic load
such as the Apogee
"Stage"
speakers. It is
best carried out
on a variety of
speakers that many
people will be
familiar with:
Vandersteen 2's
and 3s; Avalons;
Silverline Sonata
or Sonatina
speakers, and
such. The DNA-125
will not, and does
not, have trouble
matching up with a
long list of
speakers. You can
be certain that
this amplifier
will keep you
square in front of
the music you most
enjoy. There is
danger in that,
isn't there?
Perhaps,
of all the words I
can choose to
characterize this
McCormack
amplifier, the one
that most exactly
fits it is the
word
"musical."
That can be a
somewhat ambiguous
term, so let me
open it up a bit
in relation to
this little
amplification
giant.
I
mentioned that the
DNA-125 seemed,
from the outset,
to be
"showing
off." That
display of sonic
good humor was not
achieved by an
aggressive sonic
presentation. Nor
was it a display
of lushness, of
over-ripe audio
Technicolor
nuances. What I
heard, right out
of the box, was an
amplifier than
owned a quiet
authority--sonic
ease and
relaxation that
betrayed its 125
watts per side.
In
truth, I cannot
remember ever
hearing an amp
this size that
seemed so fully in
control of each
dimension of the
sound it was fed.
There is, for me,
after a
considerable time
listening, a
mysterious quality
to this amp. It
must be defined in
terms of its
surplus of musical
wisdom. This
amplifier has an
almost
aristocratic
bearing--a reserve
of emotion, signal
control, damping
power, physical
grandeur--each of
which charms your
hearing, all of
them together
never seeming
"additive"
or cluttered or
somehow vying for
attention out
front. However, I
do not mean that
this is a
"laid
back"
amplifier.
Early
in my time with
the amplifier, I
threw a humongous
big Latin
percussion
ensemble at it.
This was an
outdoor concert
that I recorded in
the California
Plaza, smack in
the heart of
downtown Los
Angeles. Four
high-energy
percussionists
(including leader
and percussive mad
man
extraordinaire,
Alex Acuna) plus
three close-miked
horns, piano,
bass, and a
magnificent Cuban
vocalist, Lucrecia,
along with her two
back-up vocalists
from Cuba. On a
scale of 1–10,
the energy on this
session weighed in
at 10+.
It
may have been the
manic go-for-it
music lover in me
that could not
wait to find out
how the DNA-125
would handle
difficult
material--in which
an extremely wide
and deep sound
stage is
"there"
on the recording
to be recreated.
If I had any
harbored doubt
that this amp
could do the
trick, I was
disabused
instantaneously.
WHAM!
Alex's powerful
rhythmic thumps
slam at you stage
center. His three
demonic percussion
colleagues lift
the energy further
with timbales,
conga, bongo,
chakare, and
blocks. Justo
Almario wails in,
at the fore of his
three-horn front
line. And you are
off! This is not
music for the
squeamish. If you
dig salsa, if you
like to boogie--if
you were one of
several thousand
screaming
witnesses on hand
for that beautiful
full-moon night,
the band and the
lake in front of
you, three
shimmering moon
lit glass towers
like huge
sentinels around
the plaza--you are
in the right place
here. The
recording has you
front and center.
It has the whole
scene. Alex's gang
is coming at you
here and now.
Percussion
instruments
present an
interesting test
of any amplifier's
ability to handle
high-density sonic
pulses that, on
occasion, carry
long transient
decays while, on
other occasions,
stop with a sudden
thwack. An amp
must be up to
either challenge
with an equal
degree of control.
The motto of the
DNA-125 is "Que
Pasa?"
Nothing
bothers this unit.
It simply delivers
music the way
music sits on the
tape, disc, (or
vinyl) awaiting
release. The amp
passed the
walk-through-fire
test.
If
I sound as if I
like the DNA-125,
you read me
correctly. I'm
sure most
audiophile folks
feel that their
personal
persnicketiness is
necessary. Nit
picking is the
essence of
audiophilia. Mine
is no different.
"This
amplifier shows
off its virtues
by getting out
of the way of
the music it so
faithfully
recreates. It is
not flashy. It
will not blow
you away with
seemingly
infinite upper
spectrum
extension. But
it gives you all
of the
music."
Within
the circle of that
glorious (stupid,
never look back)
sonic universe, I
have two
near-obsessions:
cables that color
musical signals
that I give them
to reproduce with
minimal editorial
intrusion; and
amplifiers that
"show
off" with
less respect for
the analog ease
and purity of
ambient musical
information than
for their own
behemoth signal
heft.
More
amplification,
greater power,
higher current, is
not always better.
The most
remarkable
amplifiers have a
difficult to
define calmness
and authority.
Music seems to
just appear
between and all
around your
speakers. On well
recorded, well
amplified musical
presentations, the
speakers do not so
much
"disappear"
as they seem
irrelevant, as if
they are strangely
disengaged from
sonic grandeur
that enfolds you
within it.
McCormack
DNA-125s approach
this
seldom-achieved
magic. At least
they have done so,
with my Cabasse
Baltic-Stromboli
setup, at the
precise moment
that I integrated
a Vandersteen
subwoofer into the
sonic equation.
But
here a danger
lurks. There is a
problem when such
palpable musical
glory appears so
close within reach
at home. One is
tempted to ride
right past waiting
tasks in order to
hang out with your
own seduction.
Meals become less
important than
replaying old
favorites with new
splendor.
I'm
aware that such a
priority can be
characterized
negatively, as
self-absorption,
or worse. But who
cares? Life is
short. Music is
important. And
great music
reproduced
beautifully
deepens any life.
With
the McCormack
DNA-125 amp, you
have an excellent
chance to gain
greater musical
and spiritual
depth. With each
year, I become
less enchanted by
the nature of
amplification.
Apparently, it is
very easy to get
amplification
wrong in one
respect or
another. Or, in
reverse,
amplification is
difficult to get
right.
Amplification
and cables can be
the bane of one's
musical existence
if you live inside
live music all the
time. Since I live
inside of live
music every week
of my life, I
continue to pursue
better signal
delivery back at
the ranch. And
yet, against my
suspicion that the
amplifier I want
and need may never
be created, I am
slowly coming to a
cautious sense
that the DNA-125
and its bigger
kin, the DNA-225,
have cut down the
distance between
my idealized hope
and what is both
possible and
affordable here
and now.
Steve
McCormack is a
very clever
fellow. He does
not want to win
awards. He seems
heedless of the
reach that so many
design gurus
employ, seeking
cost-no-object
gear that
justifies itself
by assuring us
that the final
one-percent of its
audio nirvana
inevitably costs
an additional
ninety- percent.
I
routinely listen
to a pair of
expensive
mono-block tube
amps that cost
more than the
cumulative total
of the first three
cars I bought. One
of those was a new
Volvo. I am
seduced by sonic
magic, but sonic
magic comes in
various guises.
One of them is
simple to state
and doubtless hard
to execute (or
there would be
more): get the
music right. Let
music exert itself
on its own terms,
with rhythmic
timbres, vocal
textures, spectral
coherence, and
innate melodic
clarity and
harmonic pulse.
Crudely put, that
is exactly what
this great
amplifier does.
There
are few amplifiers
that I have ever
heard, at any
price, that match
the DNA-125 for
musical rightness,
sonic ease, and
what I will call
ambient vivacity
and relaxation.
This amplifier
shows off its
virtues by getting
out of the way of
the music it so
faithfully
recreates. It is
not flashy. It
will not blow you
away with
seemingly infinite
upper spectrum
extension. But it
gives you all of
the music.
Everything. If it
did not deliver
calm, faithful
looks into
soundstages that I
have recorded, I
would walk away
from it without
another word. This
is the best
amplifier I have
ever heard under
$2,000. It is a
magnificent amp at
any price.

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